If you’re anything like me, the aroma of freshly baked bread is something that never fails to make your mouth water. And if that bread is the slightly sweet, subtly nutty, and wonderfully aromatic Poppy Seed Bread, then you’re in for a real treat! This recipe is one that I hold dear to my heart. It’s got a unique twist to it – it uses a Betty Crocker butter pecan cake mix and a small package of instant coconut pudding. These two ingredients transform the traditional poppy seed bread into something extraordinary. Not only does it add to the taste, but it also makes the bread incredibly moist and fluffy. The poppy seeds add just the right amount of crunch and the butter pecan-coconut combo is simply out of this world. But what I love the most about this recipe is its simplicity. It’s super easy to make, and it freezes well, so you can always have a loaf ready for when those cravings hit. I hope you enjoy making (and eating) this bread as much as I do!
Ingredients
- 1 pkg. Betty Crocker butter pecan cake mix
- 1 small pkg. instant coconut pudding
- 1 c. boiling water
- 2 Tbsp. poppy seed
- 1/2 c. oil
- 4 eggs
Baking Instructions
- Mix boiling
- water and poppy seed together.
- Set aside. Mix remaining
- ingredients.
- Add seed and water mixture.
- Pour into 2 greased
- loaf
- pans.
- Bake at 325° for 1 hour.
- Freezes well.
Calorie: 400
Total cooking time: 1 hour
Difficulty level: Easy

The Great Poppy Seed Bread Experiment
Let’s talk about the time I decided to tackle the culinary beast known as Poppy Seed Bread. Trust me, it’s not the cakewalk (pun intended) people make it out to be.
Ingredients: The Key Players
The cast of this culinary drama includes a package of Betty Crocker butter pecan cake mix (because why make life hard for ourselves?), a small package of instant coconut pudding (because we’re fancy like that), 1 cup of boiling water (a.k.a. liquid fire), 2 tablespoons of poppy seed (the star of the show), half a cup of oil (the slippery accomplice), and 4 eggs (because, apparently, it’s not a real recipe without them).
Act 1: The Hot and Seedy Affair
First off, I boiled the water. Sounds easy, right? Wrong. Boiling water is a menacing task. One moment it’s calm, and the next it’s bubbling like a witch’s cauldron.
Once I had my boiling water, I mixed it with the poppy seeds. The poppy seeds took a steamy bath in the boiling water, absorbing it with an almost greedy fervor. I set this aside, half expecting it to explode at any moment.
Act 2: The Mixing and Mashing
Next, I tackled the remaining ingredients. The butter pecan cake mix, the instant coconut pudding, the oil, and the eggs. Mixing them together felt like conducting a symphony of flavors. The butter pecan and coconut pudding were the string section, the oil was the percussion, and the eggs? The eggs were the unsung heroes – the triangle players of the baking world.
Act 3: The Grand Union
Then came the moment of truth – adding the seed and water mixture to the rest of the ingredients. The poppy seeds, now plump and juicy, swirled into the cake mix like a black hole, sucking in all the flavor and adding their own nutty twist.
Act 4: Into the Oven
The mixed batter then made its way into two greased loaf pans. Getting the batter into the pans was like trying to herd cats. Some of it wanted to stick to the spoon, some of it tried to escape onto the counter, but eventually, I got it all in.
Then, into the oven they went. They baked at 325° (a moderate sauna for bread, if you ask me) for a full hour. The wait was excruciating. But the smell… oh, the smell was heavenly. It was like being wrapped in a warm, sweet, nutty blanket.
Epilogue: The Aftermath
Did I mention this bread freezes well? Yep. It’s the gift that keeps on giving. After all that hard work and dedicated stirring, you can freeze it and save it for a rainy day.
So, there you have it, my friends. The saga of the Poppy Seed Bread. It was a rollercoaster of emotions and a test of my patience, but in the end, I emerged victorious. And hungry. Very, very hungry.
Until next time, keep baking, keep experimenting, and remember, the kitchen is your playground. Just, you know, a playground with knives and fire.